Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just finish?

I am kind of bummed to hear it wasn't that good. I have wanted to read it for years and FINALLY bought it.

I had tried to read this one before and don't remember why I put it down but this time I was reading it for some time on Kindle for iPhone. I enjoyed its psychological realism but the etext wasn't edited too well and that was distracting.
And in general, I think I need to pay more attention to the translations I choose.

I also just finished this book and really loved it - need I say it included more details and was better than the movie? I also think it should be on the List!

I'm just getting ready (with anticipation) to start Wise Blood by O'Connor. I've read several of her short stories - definitely strange, but thought-provoking!


What did you think of it? I stopped about 1/3 of the way in, but am going to finish it some time

Sharon,
Can you write a review of this without giving anything away?

What did you think of it? I stopped about 1/3 of the way in, but am going to finish it some time
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It was a little bit complicated. I had problem with guessing who is talking. For me the narrator was speaking through Austerlitz. Or maybe it was Austerlitz talking through the narrator?




I'm excited to learn that there is a new Buddenbrooks movie to be released in Germany next month!

Yeah, but what beautiful anger! How did you like Coelho? Personally, I hate his guts!


Faulkner's use of language is amazing. I find him hard to read, though, because he exhausts me.
This was my first Coelho. I didn't hate it; the message was a bit facile, and I am not really keen on his apparent view of the morality of the doctor's action. But I am a little perplexed as to why it's on the list when other, better authors are unrepresented.









Julia, I gave the book three out of five stars. My greatest difficulty came at the beginning, being thrown so many names and street names in Spanish that I had no background for. I struggled to get through the first third, mostly for that reason and that nothing much was happening. I liked the rest of the book as I can be a stickler for detail when it falls in the historical fiction category. Accurate or not (and I supposed this time it was pretty true to events), the detail adds to the credibility of the version of events being described.
I have heard of others who say this is not his best work; but there are so many books on dictatorships to choose from, I don't know why Boxall et al picked this one by Llosa.
I will read his other works as I come across them though, but this was my first one by the author.

I recommend "The Time of the Hero" and "Captain Pantoja and the Special Service". They are not in the 1001 book list, but I think it's Vargas Llosa at his best. Unfortunately, being a Spanish speaker myself, I don't know how much of his style is lost in translation, but he is definitely my favourite Latin American writer.


That's a teaser to a story. What exactly were those two books doing in a box on your street?


not bad... but too short! and i really like the ending especially that i imagined that it in quite different way ( ;


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Books mentioned in this topic
Troubles (other topics)This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen (other topics)
Sister Carrie (other topics)
Life of a Good-for-nothing (other topics)
The Singapore Grip (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Jorge Luis Borges (other topics)Juan Carlos Onetti (other topics)
Flann O'Brien (other topics)
Clarice Lispector (other topics)
Vladimir Nabokov (other topics)
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Also read the kite runner, what a fantastic book, why is this not on the list?